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OHIO STATE JOURNAL AND REGISTER. i VOLUME 28. COLUMBUS, OHIO, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1838. NUMBER 9. I Terms: $3 00 a va in advance other is 454 00. PUBLISHED WCIKLV BV C. SCOTT fc J. M. GALLAGHER. Office on Stale street, Two doore Weit of the Clinton Bank. JOHN M. GALLAGHER, EDITOR. ADVERTISING. Twelve line or letw, onctnioriloii, 90 50 u tliree..." t 00 m i enchaddlttoiiRllnMrtion,,. 3 25 ti . three montln, 3 00 i tlx montlii 5 00 u it tt twelve month!, 8 00 Longer nd vert Isementi hi tlie moii proportion is the above. A deduction of iwnnly par cent., (on the icch,) when the amount exceed! twnfity dollnraiu tlx monthi. AH Advertisement! ehonld be marked on their free with the number of tnwrtio.it denlred, or they will be continued till order d out, and cli urged by the Insertion. No retponiHiillty for errori In legnl Court Advertiwuiente, lieyond the amount charged for their limnlon. tiarly aovkhtiiino. One-eli(IUh of a column, (nhont 25 Hum,) 912 00 One-fourth 16 00 One half. " ......25 00 A full column, 40 00 Any Advertlnr exreedlutr the amount engaged, to he char6d for the esceai, at the ttm rate above mentioned. p" All letters relating to itibfcrintfoni inuat be addreued, (port-paid,) to the ruBuanitR. "EAST AND WEST." When the readers of the National Intelligencer peruse the interesting and able article upon the subject of the North American Review, let them apply its reasonings ami statements to tlie Western Magazine which has recently sprung Pallas-clad into the lending rank of Western periodical literature. For it cannot be gainsaid, that the literature of the Mississippi valley is regarded east of the Apalachian ridge, as American literature is regarded in England. Eastern book-publishers are the dragons which guard the Hesperian avenues, and they look upon adventurers from the West as pilferers who would steal away the golden fruit which in their estimation belongs by copy-right to the authors who have received from them permission to enter the sacred gardens. As the North American Reviow asserted the rights and defended the fame of this great Western empire, so will our more humble monthly demand at the hands of the East, fair re spect and impartial justice towards tlie authors of the Great Mississippi Valley. OHIO. The New York Sunday Morning News has a comprehensive article, the character of which is explained by its title "Political and Historical glance at the States." The portion devoted to Ohio we append. It is in the strain apostrophical. Ohio. Oldest empire State of the emigrating mas- ses that the eastern hives of Anglo-Saxon population have sent fori h. Foremost with the Kentuckiane of Virginia, these New England adventurers spread the dominion of the emigrant and pioneers into the thickets of impenetrable masses of unhewn forest in the midst of massacres, burnings and seal pings by Indian tribes, too horrid for tlie imagination to conceive. Triumphed did they at last; and beauteous fields, a pleasant, wide domain, margined by the blue Lakes and irrigated by nohle rivers, is the reward of their countless perils. The "Buckeye" can sit under his native forest tree, and point with lofty emotions to that which has been and is the deeds of his forefathers that made the fierce savage tremblethe rude huts that served for fortresses and tho wild chaos of vegetation, and tumbling stream, and glassy lake, that in the dreary solitudes covered the land where now lovely villas, and spires, and cities, and canals, and jb aqueducts, and embankments, and culverts, and fleets I of magnificent steamboats booming over the Ohio's wave, give evidence of the mighty changes wrought by men that can and will do "what man dare do." State of the venerated warrior, who stood before the forlorn hope and led on thy legions Slate, that cherishes in thy bosom the brave, llie upright, the spotless hero of Tippecanoe and of the Thames foster thypa--fjjrjjutioneer, and cling round his fortunes, for they are entwined with yours. THOMAS EWING. , Tho Augusta (Maine) Age, having, by way of reproach, styled Mr. Bond " a $eeond fitting, the Kennebcck Journal, published in the same city, refers to the remark in tlie language contained in the paragraph quoted below. It is flattering to Ohio, to know that one of her favorite sons is so properly ap preciated and so highly valued in tlie State lying at the greatest distance from her. The Journal says: We thank the age for the very first words it begins with, "a second Kwine." The allusion is to Thomas Kwing, as fine fellow as ever broke bread, and a Iirst-rale man. lie ocgau nis career oycnoppiiigcura wood fur the suit works, got a few books and read them of eveninirs. or read them at night while he tend ed the salt kettles. The more ho read, the more he wanted to learn. Aftor a few years he made money enough with his axo to pay for some schooling, studied law aftor he was 25, became an eminent lawyer, and was chosen a Senator in Congress from Ohio. When that State went over to Gen. Jackson, Ewing did not go. Me was able to hew his own way in the wooda. or in the councils of the country. Ho was not amoni' tlie flood-wood which went with the tide. He wns mnile of too stubborn stuff. He was Whig in grain, and was found, accordingly, ready to resist the encroachments, and to expose uie corruptions, 01 pow-er. What the Ace particularly alludes to was his f. mous report on Pott Office alnucs, a report which drew upon him the bitterest curses of the mercenary horde who had been fattening on the public plunder. They set uuon him with one accord, from Geortria to Maine. The report was made after great Inbor and indefatigable research, and will go hereafter to show Mr. Kw ing to have been not only a tailhlul, but a most lntie- futiirablo and honest public sentinel. So overwhelm inir were the abuses ferreted out by Mr. L'winnand his associates on the committee, that the President gave Mr. Barry, (tho Postmaster General,) leave to resign, and sent him to Spain, and the man who had the nrinciiial control in the office, Obadiah B. Brown, was dismissed from the office. Brown was a chief clerk, and since tlie dismission Of those vigilant and faithful officers, the two Bradleye, he had grunted ex tra allowances, and made contracts, pretty much as he pleased. He went into office poor, and came out of it worth, it is said, $100,000. It was proved that mail contractors made presents to him, and he granted them extra allowances. Ho wns removed, and made a scapeooat not only for his own sins, but for those of .. ' . . i ...!.l. I..... Was l. I.SnJ otners. Ana wnai wasuoite wiiiiiiiiiu iTnaiiouini and imprisoned for years, as Tobias Walkins wns for a domination ot alow nuuureu aoiuirsi yu mi, no had pocketed forty times as much as Walkins, and did it without any plea of extreme want, as Walkina did. Did tlie vioilant Jackson reformers attempt to punish himl Did the presses which had been so indignant against Walkins utter a word against Brownl Neither. Thus, nrcsaea reserved all Iheir abuse to be showered on the faithful Senator who had probed the iniquity and oxpoaed it to the publics and Parson Brown instead of heiucr nut in the same jail where Walkins had been, is employed to wrilo the "Martyrdom of Villry," in order to make John r airfield available as a cand idate for a Governor of Maine. So much for "another Ewing." If Mr. Bond is another Ewing, it is enough for him. He cannot desire a higher honor, J7" The npslart editors of the Locofoco press are much annoyed at the movements of Young Whigs. One says that no Whig Young Man is good for any thing! and another recommends that the Young Whigs hold their Convention in the Ohio Penitentiary ! MOVEMENTS OF THE PEOPLE.- RICIILAND COUNTY. At a meeting of the Whigs of Springfield township, Richland connty, Ohio, held in Ontario on Saturday the 4th inst., they adopted by unanimous vote, the following preamble and resolutions. Whereas, the measures of the present administra tion have been calculated to disappoint the high expectations excited in the community by previous promises; and whereas, the Executive, by an unwarranted and illegal interference with the currency of the country, has affected such a complete derange ment of money matters, as to paralize enterprise, and affect every part of community; and whereas, we as a party do, and always have disapproved of the caucus system, by means of which the party now in power obtained that power, which they have so basely abused and wielded to the destruction of our dearest interests. Therefore, Haolved, That we consider the exigencies of the limes, and corruption and misrule that obtain, as suf ficient reasons for adopting, at this time., tho caucus system. Itetolved, I hat the members of this convention view with painful regret and decided disapprobation, the course pursued by the present administration; first, in departing in toto from the wholesome principles by which it pledged itself to be governed, if put in power, and pursuing a course derogatory to the best inter ests of tlie people; second, in extravagantly expend ing the people's money on political favorites, and thereby rendering the Treasury bankrupt; third, in an unwarranted and unprecedented exercise and abuse of executive patronage; removiug political opponents and faithful publio servants from office, and thus providing places and rewards for political favorites and hireling followers. Resolved, That we will use every fair and honora ble means to put down a set of office-holders, who have violated the pledges upon which they were promoted, and have wantonly trampled upon the rights of the people and squandered their money. lietolvei. That we will cordially unite in supporting, at the ensuing election, the candidates taken up by Ihe Whigs; so far as the great principles of reform are involved. On motion, Raohed, That a committee of three be appointed to represent Springfield township, in a County Convention lo meet in Mansfield on the 11th inst. The following gentlemen were chosen: Henry Crabs, W. F. Ayes, and A. B. Coffinberry. un motion, Rooked, That the proceedings of this Convention be signed by the Chairman and countersigned by the secretary, ana sent to tne editors ol the "f lag ot the reopie ai voiumDus, lor publication. WM. POOL, CAairnwn. J. C. Evans, Secretary. RESOLUTIONS Adopted at a Convention of the Whig! of Montgomery eoumy. Resolved, That the present irresponsible and irre deemable Government shin plaster party like the unnatural father, who for bread, gave his children a atone, they promised us gold and silver have given us rags otherwise called Treasury Shin Plasters. The people are every where proclaiming in a voice of uiunuri, uejxirt yc wumeni Ul iniquity. ncsoivea, i Mat we regard with the highest granulation, the atronir ana unaualifiod conriemnatinn. which the peopla have, at the ballot box. meted out to the Sub-Treasury Expedient of the present adminis-tion.Residved, That we look earnestly forward to the re turn of the day of a sound currency, and believe, that although the present National Administration may be the last to make its own currency sound, by promptly redeeming its millions of Treasury Notes, it will also be the last, that will venture to tamper with the vital interests of a nation, by attempting to clutch all the i i oj ;i. i ,u. .... L. .?. J ... gu.u a.u on. ci ,o wwihj nt uiu siiectm aim particular benefit of its dependent office-holders. Itetolved, That the election of THOMAS EWING to the United States Senate) by the next Legislature of Ohio, is most ardently desired by the Whigs of Montgomery county, in common with their brethren throughout 'the Stain, and that the honor of siding to reinstate this pure Patriot and Statesman in the high station, to which the voice of the people of his Stale has more than once been raised to demand his recal, will be felt by every Whig of Ohio to be "glory enough fur one day." SHELBY COUNTY. An unusually larira and respectable meeting of the Whigs of this county, was held at the Court-house on Saturday the 38th ull., for the purpose of selecting Delegates to the Senatorial and Representative Convention at Kalida, on the 9th of August, and for making arrangements generally for the approaching b lection. Great harmony and good feeling prevailed through out the meeting. Every man seemed resolved to do his duty in tlie coming contest. J. Hollister of Wood county, was unanimously recommended to the Convention as a candidate for Senator, and Joseph S. Up-degraft of Shelby county, was unanimously recommended to the Convention as a candidate for the House of Representatives. A perfect willingness. however, wns felt and evinced by tho meeting to abide the result of tho Convention, throwing away all per tonal preferences, to unite unanimously and tealously .- i .1 - l -C .i . , . . . r id insure inrj inuiiiiii ui intj grout nnu patriotic principles which actuate them. Mr. Goode is the unanimous choice of the Whigs of the county, as a candidate for re-election to Congress, and he will be supported with increased leal and spirit. RESOLUTIONS Adopted at a Convention of the Whigs of JIW county. Resohed. That the importance of harms- a Whiff Legislature at the next session is greatly enhanced by Ihe fact that a Senator of the United States will be elected for the term of six years. Itetolved, I hat we hereby pledge to our big brethren of this Senatorial and Representative district, our cordial co-operation to redeem Ihe character of the district from the degrading thraldom, to which, through the supineness of some of our political friends we were last year subjected. Resolved, I hat In order to insure success at the polls, and have due and proper influence in the legislative halls, none other but men of well known moral, and political integrity, and talents, ought to be put in nomination. Resolved, That we have undiminished confidence in the wisdom and integrity of Ihe Executive of this Stale, (Joseph Vance,) and pledge ourselves lo use all honorable means to secure his re-election. Remitted, That we pledge ourselves lo aid the Pres ident by all lawful means to follow in the footsteps of his predecessor lo the peaceltil shsdea ol private tile. Resolved, That we hail with unbounded exultation, the evidence, which, from time lo time, for the past year, we have witnessed, throughout the Union, of a radical change in the views of a groat portion of the people heretofore considered as friends of Ihe administration; but morn particularly in the States of Mains, Rhode lalnnd, Connecticut, New York, North Carolina, Mississippi, Virginia, and Louisana; and that the good work is sweeping over the land with an impetus which no art can avert: and wo indulge tho Joyous hope that the present year will yet witness the addition of Illinois, Michigan and New Hampshire. Resolved, That as our only hope of achange of mea sures in the government, favorable lo Ihe interests of the people, rests upon a chango oi men, and as this can only bo etiocieu tnrougn tne oauoi oox, we earnestly solicit the whigs of this county, lobe up and doing. Resolved, That the Central Committee of this coun ty, be requested, forthwith, to adopt such measures as shall effect a complete organiiation of the whigs in every township, that our whole strength may be felt at uie pons, on tne socona i ueeony oi uciooer next! From the Cincinnati Gazette. CANVASS FOR GOVERNOR. No. 1. Peculiar traits of character mark the present canvass for Governor iu Ohio, as it is conducted on Ihe part of those, who support the measures of the execu tive department of the Nation one of the most stri king is, the open boldness with which the candidate comes out and rests his claim lo preference upon the ground of adherence to the measures of the national executive. Avowedly, he is ihe Van Buren locofoco cand idate. The power and patronage of tlie President of the U. States are directly brought to bear upon the Stale election of Governor. For the operative benefit of this power, in all its appliances, the candidate submits himself to the drudgery of performing service, heretofore unknown in the election of a Governor of Ohio. He is selected for his ready utterance, and it is imposed upon him that he shall traverse the State, and speechify in defence of his patron President. A well broke ox comes to his place, at the sight of his yoke, and on the word of his driver; even so Wilson Shannon takes up his burthen. He is bidden and he obeys. A servitude like this in an election canvass for Governor of Ohio, is a new thing under the sun. Should it be greeted with a favorable reception, or should it be frowned upon, as a measure of evil tendency that ought to be reprobated and repelled, on Ihe instant of its appearancel Every good citizen should faithfully commune with himself upon the matters which these inquiries bring into view. If he can find any commendable point in this scheme of conducting a gubernatorial election, he must look at publio affairs, in a light very different from that present to my vision. It seems to me every way discreditable, that a candidate for the Chief Magistracy of one of the separate States of the Union, should engage himself to become the white-washing partizan of the President in office, and, in virtue of that engagement, should cast himself from place to place, wiih his ready manufactured soap-suds and white-wash, and with assorted brushes, prepared to work at any job the Kitchen Cabinet scullions may assign him. In this vocation Wilson Shannon has recently been employed, and his employers have had the benefit of such swath and frolh as he could manufacture. With these he was directed to bespatter ihe banks. The product of his labors has been embodied and printed for public edification. It is worth while to look a little at Us contents. A little more than twelve months ago, the Globe issued a denunciation against banks, in behalf of President Van Buren, and in the form of a letter from General ex-President Jackson. This was Ihe Ox Driver holding up the yoke and giving the word. The entire team, far and near, walked into its place, by individuals, and in Ihe aggregate. Destruction a-gainst banks was instantly recognized as the locofoco watchword, throughout tlie Union. It was upreared as an alarum tocsin of party, and changes of every character of denunciation have been rung upon it from that time to this, when all are embodied In Ihe tremendous alarum of Wilson Shannon. Here is one of its intonations. "A deadly enemy has obtruded itself upon onr fancied security, and is penetrating with its subtlest strength the vitals of our political independence. Less obvious in its operations than a foreign enemy, it is far more dangerous; and should be met with as determined resistance. Il is the money power of the country in tlie hands of defectively organized corpora-Will any reader lend his attention to an analizalion of this singular paragrapbl It may be worth his while. "A deadly enemy the money power of the country in the hands of defectively organized corporations" is in our midst. Is this a truth subject to no controversy t If it be a truth, Ihen note the consequences it includes. It fastens upon the people, the citizens of the State, two most revolting stigmas: Gross ignorance and sordid corruption- one so destitute of discrimination as to cherish 'a aeadly enemy and regard It as a Iriend- iy agent tne oilier, so unse in .pint, aa to uuw op- ore the money power, In the most abject prostration of idolatrous adoration 1 Are the people of Ohio thus ignorant! do they sacrifice to the Moloch of money their whole moral sense! II this is not the condition of Ihe great body of the citizens, Ihen Wilson Shannon founds his denunciation of the banks upon a radi cal misconception of facts. I hold that Wilson Shan non is thus mistaken: that tlie people of Ohio are a discerning people, spt in rvimpr..hndinrj what is inju-1 rlous, andwhal ad vintagnous lo thtir interests pri.,ri J in tne puroim ui inuMi luitiresi., out witn a lieou y regard to legal and moral obligation. The banks are in no sense, "a deadly enemy:" the aggregate of their operations have not inflicted injuries, but have confer red oenehta upon the country. The location ot a bank always has been hailed as a beneficial measure, in every community where auch location has been made and this has not turned out to be mere matter of moonshine the reality has entered into all Ihe business of the place. Banks hsre origi nated snd fostered enterprise. Hence bos come an increased value of land, an improved market for all the productions of agriculture, higher wages to the laborers. Banks have built up towns, constructed steamboats, given life and vigor to mechanics, founded com mercial houses, developed new sources ol commerce. tanks have constructed canals and raii-roada and turnpikes Banks have built churches and school houses. In everything upon which we pride ourselves foi use, for convenience, for instruction, for embellish ment, Banks have largely contributed, by agencies direct and indirect, often imperceptible aa the atmosphere, seen and felt only in nappy and pemauent ie-suits. No man ean deny to Banks the beneficial agen cies here attributed to them. What counteracting deadly mlschiel accompanies those operations so lo overbalance them, as that Banks should be marked for reprobation! Wilson Shsnnon says they have become politioal engines. We will look at thai in another number. From IlieClnrlnmU OsietM. CANVASS FOR GOVERNOR. No. 9. "I think it is susceptible of Uie clearest demonstra tion that the banking institutions have become thoroughly and distinctly political, and have boldly taken the field, and formed a strict alliance with a powerful, active, and organized party, in open hostility to our most valuable institutions. Thus speaks Wilson Shannon, and he dovolea bim self to Ihe demonstration that he speaks correctly This calls for examination. He commences with the dead Monster: "The various movements of the late Bank of the U, States are notorious. Prom Ihe moment General Jackson expressed a determination to oppose its further existence, that institution has been exercising nil Its stupendous powers to thwart and overthrow an administration, invosled with its only authority, by the people. The Bank of the United Slates was a public insti tution, in which a vory great number of citiiens, of all classes, took a deep interest, I hey believed It to be constitutionally organized: to be of vital impor tance, oi inoispensunie necpssity to tne neaitniui operations of the business of the country: they apprehend great derangements, perplexities and losses to individuals, and vexatious embarrassments to the pub lio, from its discontinuance. Thai a large mass of American citizens thus estimated the Bank of tlie U. States is indisputable. 1 heso citizens had an undouht ed right to struggle for the oontinunnce of an institution that ihey valued aa of so much usefulness. When lien. Jackson, as president ol the U. smtea, avowed HIS "determination to oppose its future existence." did thai avowal deprive any cititen of HIS right to advocate that existence! Did the hostile avowal of the Pre sident take from the institution any right whatever! Was it not one of the rights of Ihe Individuals who composed and conducted the institution lo ask of Congress a continuance of iu existence! Is it not, then, a strange perversion of right reason to treat Ihe efforts of Ihe Bank and its fri nils to sustain it, against the determination of President Jackson that it should he destroyed, as a wrong offered lo any body! What is this, but making il out a crime to attempt thwarting the determination of the President, upon any impor- tant puDiio iHHuuf , n uuuiniio use uii. i. in in. oigw est degree, anti-Republican. It invests the President with tlie moBt absolute power, even to the taking away from every citizen his right of free discussion. Here is the plain interpretation: "the President has declared his deteimination: the President is invested with his only authority by the people: therefore, to oppose the declared determination of tlie President, is a bold and unscrupulous obliquity not to be tolerated!! " This mischievous super-monarchical notion is a leading feature, in all the dogmas of our new locofoco democracy. The determination of the President controls all the departments of Ihe Government, legislative and judicial, as well as executive, and in addition shuts up the mouth of the citizen ! ! Wilson Shannon promulges this doctrine, in holding up to reproacli the conduct of the Bank ol the U. States, in struggle-ing to retain its existence notwithstanding the proclaimed determination of President Jackson. I hold that the struggle of the Bank was legitimate. The imputations of corruption against it, in my judgment, are unsupported by proof. The warfare between the President snd the Bank, and between the citizens who took different sides, was a contest naturally arising out of the character and progress of onr government. That it assumed, on the part of President Jackson, a personal character towards the Bank, is a consequence of Ihe same monarchical heresy just noticed. The President and his adherents treated the efforts of tlie Bank as acts of rebellion. The locofoco democracy have adopted this notion, and they continue to rage a-gainst Nick Biddle in a spirit of maniac impotence, humiliating to Uie. spirit of the country. The heresies of Wilsoi Shannon are but the misconceptions snd exsggersibns of Ihose who have made battle a-gainst the Bank of the U. S., and who continue their warfare against the Biddle Bank of Pennsylvania, with which the State of Ohio has certainly very little to do. The Slate Banks cams iu for a full share of Wilson Shannon's reprehension: "Our Stale Banks are little less tinctured with the same exceptionable spirit. FacM of daily occurrence will evidence the truth of this remark. In the answers of the Ohio Banks to the interrogatories propounded by the Auditor of State, last winter, by far the greater portion of these institutions, assigned aa the cause of their suspension, the policy of Uie government, thus evincing their readiness to cast anon the administration the responsibility of a mischievous event; which, if it had any adequate cause, was Ihe result of their own defective organization and mismanagement."And here is Wilson Shannon, speaking in the name of locofoco democracy, venting indignation against the State Banks, because they declare their own belief, that the measures of the National Administration have mainly contributed to the suspension of Specie Eayments ! The National Administration must not e touched ! To impute to any of its measures mischievous results, !8l'indulgean"cxc9i(inaernVi7," tlie same, seditious and rebellious as that evinced by Ihe Bank of the U. Statos! What is there of just exception to the spirit, or to Ihe fact of a reference, by the Ohio Banks to Ihe bearing of the measures of the Administration upon their affairs! This reference may be erroneous, and for that reason exceptionable; but in the fact of making it there could be no impropriety: none surely in the circumstances under which Ihe reference was made. The National Administration, when President Jackson proclaimed his determinalion to put down Ihe Bank of the U. Slates, courted sn alliance with the State Banks and invited them directly both to politi cal and pecuniary association. And the State Banks much 10 iheir discredit, greedily accepted the Invitation. A number of them associated themselves in money engagements with the Administration, and the political relation very soon became manifest. The money power favor enjoyed by the Government sffi-lialed Banks, was felt by sll the banking institutions. It insinuated itself into all their business with the "subtlest stealth," and unavoidably subjected them to the operations of the National Treasury. Their political relationship was not of their own seeking in its origin; many of them never entered into it, and paid tho penalty in obstructions of their business. The failure ol this association of the National Treasury and of tlie affiliated Banks was a necessary consequence of its absurdity, aided somewhat by knavery in its management. Intelligence forsaw and foretold the catastrophe; but the certainty of its approach could not move the Administration to take any measures tending lo prevent it. The crisis oame, and immediately the National Administration determined to heap ell the odium nnn, if. Aosdiittnni. the Ranks. The money connexion was dissolved, Ihe political association severed in twain. The National Administra tion set its mark upon the Banks, and Ihe word went forth that the locofoco democracy should do Iheir utmost to place them like Cain of old, in the predica ment ol being slain by every one. I he locoloco democracy opened upon the Banks, and the Banks hsve turned lo defend themselves. The attempt at auch defence is pronounced by Wilson Shannon aa evin cing a most "exceptionable spirit," lor which Ihe Uanks should be punished by such reform as tlie lo cofoco democracy may dictate! r rom Ihe sketch here given, the man who looks straight forward with his own eyes must see, that the political attitude of the State Banks is not a position of their own seeking. President Jackson seduced them into the political focus by formingsn alliance between them and the National Treasury When they could no longer be made of sny use, in that alliance, ihey were devoted to a ditlnrent destiny. 1 hey have had all Ihe sine of the broken up copartnership heap ed upon their backs, and tlie locofoco democracy have uvu snovting .nu continue to snout at litem, in tne manner of scape-goats of the olden lime to tlie wilderness. Driven from the political association intow hich they were first seduced snd marked by il for destruction, the Hanks arrange themselves with politicsl party for their own preservation. The Whigs know the value of Banks, and wish their preservation. They fully understand the destructive character of locofoco democracy reform, and thus feel the necessity of conservstiva association to defeat it. It has been defeated again and again, and is doomed to final defeat. The disparaging assumption of Ihe locofoco democracy, that Ihe people have not been influenced by deliberate Judgment, but have been swayed by a mere bank panic, will be indignantly repelled. Wilson Shannon snd thousands more of the locofoco democracy will learn lo iheir cost, that Ihe people have no relish for Iheir doctrines no favorable estimate of its advocates. J7Wilson Shsnnon in speech, says that the Banks hsve become political." Who made them so, Mr. Shannon! Read the following, remembering that the writer was a Vanjackson member of the Legislature when ke wrote il, and has since received a Federal sppointsient from Mr. Van Buren: "Albanv, 6lh January, 1833. "Dkas Juoob Yours just received. There are mora applications for Banks this year than ever before. ou must make out a complete list of Directors, Officers, &e. and if obtained yu must know Am. It MUST be a JACKSON BANK, and the BANK JUNTO in this place must be allowed to have a finger in the pie. Yours truly, PH. MAXWELL. " Z. Allen, Judge, to." FRANKLIN NOMINATIONS ABROAD. Tlie Clevelmul Herald thus speaks of the Whig ticket of this county: The Whigs of Franklin county have led the field in an early organiiation. They held their county convention on Uie 4ih, and put up "good men and true" for the Assembly. The nominations are Col. Juhn Kilbonrn, of Worlhington, and John W. Andrews, Esq. of Columbus. Col. Kilbourn is an old pioneer of the State, wilt unites the experience and talents that will do honor to her legislative councils. Mr. Andrews is a young genlleman of the first order of lalenls, an eloquent advocate, and a ready and skilful debater of winning address. Boiler selections eould not havo been made, 17" Tin Steamer Clinton was sunk recently a few miles below the mouth of Ihe Ohio. OHIO STATE AGIUCULTURAL SOCIETY, AMEETINO or Uie Directors of 111. Olik) Butt. Airteuliurel Society, Km held In Circlevllla, on July 28lll. pureuanl to adjournment Hreient, Win, Millar, Win. Renlek, Sr., EluU rrait, jomi wnllte, tvm. Uenlck, Jr., and Felll Renlek. An article wne n lJed and appended to tlie by lawe of the So eiety, numliered liy-law 12th. Tlie followlni tut of Premiums was then srianged by the Directors.ror Hie beat sued hull, silver plot, worth fSO 00 eecond beet do do do 40.00 Ihlrd ben do do do 30.00 for Ihe beet hull, S years old do 40i00' second beet do do do 30:00 third heat do do do 2S.IJ0" For the bell 1 year old boll do SO'.OO' second best do do do 3A.M Ihlrd brat do do do M'OO Deat bull calf under 1 year do 25.00 second beat do do do 20 00 third beet do do do 16 00- Covb, Helfero. and Heller eatvea, are onlltfedm Ihe same pra- mluinsln proportion to ages. For lha best 3 year old atoer or over tfl 00 do 3 do do do IO.DO do 1 do do do 10.00-After appointing Judies to award the premsime the meeting adjourned. WM. MlkLAH, P P. TV P. K. Unci., aee'r. O.S. A B. August 17. .9 4w. NOTICE TO ARCHITECT. TIIR Orend Lodge ofOhlo, having reaoived to ereer a Masonic Hall In Ihe town of Lancaster, the umhrtiigaed eom-mitlee, are authorised lo olTer a premium of one )iundrodBnd fifty dollars for the buit archlieciural plan, and enventy'flve dohars for the second lit plan, which must be accompaailed'irlth eslllnatea, and all suitable Information-. The plana are rei'iitred to be forwarded-' to-Laaeaster, Ohio, addrefsed lo William J. Ueeee.on or before-Uie-thvd Molidny In October next. Primed eperlflcatinne of Ihe size of .h liuildlnff. its location, dimenalone of the rooms, materials to betnaori, Ate. can lie obtained by epplleatlon lo William J. Reear4 Aaucarrier. Williaai IL Thrall, at L'lrcleville, Samuel Hlokcty. at Sleubenvllle, J. .'. Copeleii,at Cincinnati, or to Ro!rt Stewart, at aniiMvillo, Sllilo. WILLIAM I. KKIIHK, WILLIAM U. TflNALLY I 8AMUKL dTOKELBYV Ctmiun, J. O. GOPKMSN, . UOI1KI1T BTEWAETV August 17.. 9 2m. rjTRdltors In this State, friendly to the- inrArtotktn, will confer s fHvor by giving iho above a few tnaertlona m their respective papers. Q 7 Upcclflcalloni can alio lie had atiUiktamce.". ' Anli-Hpaaniodic Tincture, or MinMr'sVomforU fTMIIB moillcine haa been prepared with special reference to Uis L wents of fnmille, In order that Mother's wlslit keep snd uea It with moet perfect safety. It ta used wila unequalled success in Dlnrrliosa In all Its various forms, Dyaoalevy, Cramp Colic, snd summer dhieases of children. For sale by-oppoitiaent by Aitguat..T..6r. r-H-H. B. IIDTI.EB. Nl'RINO NTF.F.L. Q TON Spring Steel 1 j X t and 2 In. X as. a. very superior ar-bv ticls, Just received end for ssle by the mlneriliers. KLI.IS.-WINdLOW CO." July 30, 18.M..8..3SW. American, English nud Gentirut Locks. JUST received a further supply of Amcvtean.Jsnglhili and German tacks, assorted si-tee , for sn'e lowliy July 17, 1038. .6 ELI.I8, Wirt BLOW fc Co. SCREW PLATES. - 1D07.. very superior Screw Plates Just r cee tared from tdia atslf ufsclurea and for sale at a entail advance upon coat.-July 27, I8J8..6 ELL18, WtflBLOW t Ce. Tacks, Brads, and Sparables. . Sll 1 DOXES Jost received, comprising all shies for sal un- usually low by ELLIS, WIN-SLOW. Co. Juty27,18'l8..6..3iw. RACH. ISAAC K. WHITING eonllnuee to pay Uva-kfgheM price for Rags, In llookt, Paper, Stationary, or any Mner artkkahe lite In bli Store. April II. CUTI.ERV. JUST received, 1 Cask of Cutlcry,eotisbitlfior.uhlsBnd dssert knives end forks. Ivory balance hand la do. pen, pocket, 2 and 3 blade knlvee, ecUaors, shears, fte., making a Beautiful assort-msul, for sale aa usual, very low. by July 27, 18.18. .6 ELLIS, WrHSLOW ct Co. RIFLE BARRELS. JUST received a lot of Ride liarrele of superior rpisUty, snd will shortly be In receipt of a furlhev4uv-ply, for sals unsonf omnlylowby ELLIS,-WIN8LOW Jr. Ce. July 27, 1838. .8 SWEET OIL IV HETTIES. 3WEET Oil In Bottles, for Table IJicm J JustOTeelvsd by July St. T1IOS. B.-lltJTI.F.R. PEl-UMERYt'. CUT Glial Smelling Balta. Rowland'a Genuine Macosssr OIL . Anllqus Oil. Beers Oil. Cream of Lllllee. Prentiee' Comp. Shaving Cakes, Nov.-! A 1'. ou BwM, ajt . A.lviny July 24. Taroej, BuBirn.eR.I BRUSHES.. LONG Handle Flerit Broebes. Assorted Hair Urushee. Tooth do. Null do. Just received-ftnd for sale by July 21. TlfOSi -8. -BIJTI.KR. LINSEED OIL. S1 PTS. Turpentine. Lamp oil. Olive OIL Whits Lead In Kega, Oround. x " Dry. Jutl received by July 24. TIIIM.-8. BUTLER. 11 . 1-u A SUPERIOR article, at wholesale, by N. BALDWIN, Anrll IJ Ma A V....I.II. D-lut- 1. j 1 Sift BARRELS Flour for oale bv O. W. SHERWOOD... July 27 At llis brick Wnre houealieaitof ths Canal. MITIf'ST. IS hereby given to all persons Inlsreoted, tlml st our Inatsncs a writ of sttachment wae tlile day heard by Ateaander Cameron, a Justice of Hut Peers of Madlaon.townshrp, In the eoaaly of Franklin, asalust Ilia goode, ehatlele, rights, crIUs, monsys snd effecte of Henry llavely, an absconding dstitor. August B..7..3W KOOKRN ft RAREY. First Premium rrnwi enmum. THIS year Ilia Juilly celebrated Kettferd Crown Glass bus taken the Gold Medal, at lha American Institute; belag Ihe lira jear aucceseion, trial tne anuria, has beeoaweidod toil. It will be ased In Ilia new Eichange, Cueeeas Hauss, Asylum for the Blind, In the elty of New Yoak, and. In all Ilia new buildings now erecting by tlie Corporation, of dial city; also, In the 01-rard College, Philadelphia, and tlie oahlle bulldlnse at Waihlng-UM. Many very prominent aubln) ediicea dwalllne houiee. etores snd eteasa boats, eould aa named, where tt hi lo be used, (ana a large number or each where It. has been used, and given entire Benefaction.) But H le believed Hal the above will .ullire to prove tlml thle glues atands pro einlaenulhat II deeervedly tasoe precedence of every other aerl In market, and that It la In great request throughout the United Slates. Ilrilere for eny elans from 8 s 4 to 30 I 2MBlveeeeudqua. Ity, for dwellings, etoree, eteem huala, greaa hoasea, sky lights, Ac, promptly aiecuted, at the tnanufacluret'aprlcea.by ths subscribers, regularly appointed agenn for the manutieiuram. ELLIS, WINrtLOW k CO.. TIN publle sre rsajasstsd is call and asamwe Sn ankle. Eltrect from lha Rrport of the Commutes at MisAsMtkaB la alllule, Oclobet 1HJ7., " For rlehneea ot Inure and brllbnncy of surface, (aa well aa Ibkkuaea and atrength.) Uie Bedford Glaea la the moet beautiful article of tho kind, that haa ever fallen under aur nnllca. ullher of domeetle or foreign production and II affords a proud rnscl- "" "' ana enterprise ot Amerloaa aianuraclurers." The underelgned having used the above described iliu. In a greet number of public and private buildings, ef il Aral elasa, accord fully will, the foregoing eollmatastf. Iu merits, and par. iicuisriy recommend it to ell persona, whosequlre sslrong, dura bis snd brllllsnt article. Wis nt. eLaaiaaa, aarulTBuTB. William Harsell, Robert Mills, Architect, William H. Peek, Publkt Buildings, st Samuel Roome, Washington Rooms At Jarohua, Martin E. Thompson, Warner ts Klented, Issiah Rogers, Seaman dl Moors, Itbtet Towns, Alesander Slewert, Calvin Pollaid, Cornelius Mcl.eon, Gamaliel King, John Fream Jr. Thomas Thomss. Ordsrs for Bent G lass, Ground Glare, Sialsed Ulasa, for Church ae of every patiern and description, promptly executed as abovs. August 6. TOO ACRES OF LAND FOR SALE. rarsilR subscriber will sell 700 scree of unimproved land, (pert M. oi survey no. 71174, lorsiea in ine name ot John crawrord) lying In Union and Madhun countiee, on the Slate road leading from llellefonulne to Columbus, 2 miles snst of I'lenaint Valley, 8 miles from Dublin, on the Sclolo river, 1H mllee from Columbus, and 1 1 from Worlhington. The turnpike road from Bellefon-lalue lo Columbus, will paas through II. Ths Isnd H rich and well timbered, and In consequence of Ha local ellualkin, muet eoma day become very valuable. The whole tract will be sold low inn body, between that end September neat. If not sold thsn, It wl'l bs divided ao bb to auk those who may want-smsll lota, lltlo Inu and Indiaputabie, and terms sasy. JOHN a ELBERT, Juu. Mlddleburg, Logan eo.,0., July 30, Iltl8..6,.dw. P. B. Reference, Mway Curry, Ess,,, Mmena llaaa,andCal. Haye; near lbs premises. HEAD aUARTEltaV 2" Bets. 7tb Oiv. O. K. I J)eylattarf, jsmgutt 14, 1838. J MAJOR Samuel Brush, has been appointed Brlgsde Major, Capt. Wray Thomas, Brigade Quarter Heater, and Cape. Carter B. Harlan, Aid decamp to the Brigadier General, who are" to be obeyed and respected as such. Col. M. Finney, Iste Commsndant of Brigads, has gives the requieite notice, that officer muster will be held In. the city of Columbus on the 30tb fast, at which time the offieere'wui appear armed snd equipt according lo law. and furnish tbemaelvae-wlth lente, Ice., to perform camp duty. All delinquents Will bs rigidly dealt Willi according lo Isw. JAJdiB V. REYNOLDS, August 17. .9 tm. Br(g. Ben. Said Brig. NOTICE. rrtftK e-meers of the Id Reg. 2d Brig. 7th Dlv. O. af. are soliled X1 to mm to bold an orlcer atuater In Columbus, on the SOtfe snd 31rf Inst., snd parade In front oftheSlale bouae at 10 o'clock A. AT prepared to do ramp duty. By order of the Colonel. Adgiwt 1T.-9 tm.' P. TOLLER, AdJL T ATTENTION REGIME OFnCERSV HE Commissioned and Staff OHleera of the let Regiment, 24 Brig. 7th Dlv. O. U. are hereby eommarided'to parade on High atreet In front ofthe Cnpllol at the City of Columbue, on the 30tll snd 31st Inst. st 10 o'clock A. H. of ssld daya, armed and equipped to perform Officer Mualer, and also be prepared to do" camp duty aa la required by law; officers are further requested lo" hsve with them their Commissions. By order of tbe Coinmsndsnl of ssld Regiment. A iicum 3. .10 tm. . V. McELVArN-. RRHiinsi nnnKiilt.' ATTENTION officers of 1st Rltli Baltalion',' The Commla-sloned and Stair vfflcere of the lit Ride Bat. at B. Vth n O. M., are hereby commanded to parade on High atreet, In front of the Capital, at the city of Columbus, on Uie 30th and 31st Inst. st 10 o'clock A. U. of said daya, fully armed and equipped for Of. Acer Mueter;.nd slso to perform camp duty aa required by law. omceraara tures.veqneted.u, lavs wilt them.thtlr commut-etone, that they may be endorsed, i Ily order of Coaunandaut of Battalion -. Auget8.-7- O. ttUNYOtt. Adl'nt. T ATTENTION SQUA IRON 'OFFICE RSI II E Commissioned and Staff Olttcere e the let Squadron of ' ; Cavalry, 2d llrlg., 7th Dlv , O. .. sre hereby commanded l parade on high street, In front oflheCapllol.at tlie city ofCo-IbiiiIhis, on lbs 30ih last, st 10 o'clock A. M. of said dsy, armed and equipped to perform Officer Hueter. And also, be prepared Ul doeaiapdaly, ails required bylaw. Officers sre further required,. t hive wlih them their Commiaiions. By orderrthe Coinmsndsnl of ssld Bquadrenv Augst3L.l.w CARTER B. HARLAN, AJJ'nt. G IIKOMliffre.il Baltimore, No.l. French YH law Hi-lira. Gum Copal, East India Scraped. Estraet Logwood. Just received by Agnet8..7..6w. THO. 8, BOTtVErf. DIHHObUTION. THT! oo partnerahlp,haretofora eilsllng snder the name and ftrmof L. L Ol Humphrey it Co. Is Ibis day dissolved. L. HUMPHREY, D. HUMPHREY, Columbns, Aug.l,1838..6..swBW O. HUMPHREY. orr '''lie basiaess will be continued at the old stand, andei the Arm of L. TJamphrey k Co. HlfiCTrrTnRHi tvn-ris.si' ALL persons Indebted to the eetate of Afalbew Chain, dee'd, late of Meilison township, Frsnklla county, sre requited lo make Immediate navtnent: and all thnoa k., ..... aaid eatate, will present them legally aHttieruleated wUbln ou year irvm oate. n.A'1 tatKOMS CHAIN, J , JrtfUS. nri!HTn!nui I Aofu3.1R3n..7..4w, ' T PUBLIC RALE OF PROPERTY. IE anbeerilier wUI offer for aala I Un -blgheat Udder, the farm en which he at present resides, contamtnt twev boa, drad aeree nearly half cleared. There le oo the place s -goeoV dwcHkig house end ether out-houees, s good orchard, and s 8rat rale well of waler In the yard. There ie a good meadow. Aa. I will alio sell the thorough- bred boras Junius, the same day, wl'b. hie true pedigree; elm, soma other banes and aolta. some ecaal . aailcli eowa and calves snd- other eattla and hoga; also, farming, tools of different kinds, hoesehold and Skeneo fUmHara, A a. The land will be aold In payments. Persona wiahlng to buy land weuWdo well ta come and view the land before tlie day of sal, aa bargain la now offered. Terms for the other property will bs saade hnowuonlhadayof sale. n-Saia lo commence at 1 atcraesy o Saturday its 25tb day r of Auyuat, Tillolmueputable- THOMAS DDRRETTj . Bdota-lownslilp, Plckswsy CO. 0, August 3. 1838..T-3W NOTICE. IN eendbrmlly wHb the Statute of Ohio, In thle coos mads and provided, preorrlbing tba duties of County Treasurers, the Tree merer of Union eeunly gives notice Inst the amount of tax levied In Helen county for the present yesr, hi as follows, vbt i For Stale, Caual, County, Road, School, and other paiiiisae. la Union, Darby, Mlllcreek, Leeiburg, Jaebaca, Allen, ClaybournH. and Waibtngton townships. IS mills an the daSar of valuation: and In Parle, Liberty and Jeekten, 16 mills, and la York tosra. aliip, 20 mllla on the dollar of valuation; and thai the Treesursv will auend, either by himself or deputy, one dav In each town ship, ntulie usual place of holding elections In said lownablp, for iMcpiupuav ui receiving iaxcs,ss ioiiowb: In Union tp. No. , Aug. 21 ' InLeeebarata.ff.r. Ans.M Darby 2, 22 Alien, 8, - 30 Jesaoss-Mine reek Pavta Liberty h 3, -23 Jeekssa 9, Sept. 6 4, 24 I York 10, 4 . n, ii-i utaybMHa- Washington "la. n a and at bli aOea m Marravllle during lbs months of Oatabet snd November, for lbs purpose of recelimg rhe can fee lbs nraaaaa 'August,.., A. POLLOCK, Trass. . FURTHER NOTICE. rTTtl E iralOK eoaaly Superintendent of Common Schools UJ ,k X tend at thesame time and place for the purpose oCenoaUn, wllh. and MfnMiw m..m. ,1.. ... 1 1, ' . - , . ., ' me supennten. denleandlhe Dtrectore ofthe respecUvs towtumlpa... ThJaat Ura . August 8. .7 A. POLLOCK, Traaa. Medical Department of the Cincinnati Collesre. TUB Session eommsness the lait Monday of October, and terminates Uie leal Salardny of February; but by a lata regulation of the faculty, four lectures will be delivered dally by the profeeMrs during ths period of examination of candidal! foe degree, -which will, nrdsr ne circustiuaMS, Cjonswaos until tba regular aeaawn shall have expired. Special aud Sarfteel .laalewy. by Joseph N. McDowell, M. D, Gaatref sod Fat Mtfial aalesiy ad Myriefwy, by Samuel D. Grose, M.D. Stni by Wlllsrd Psrker, II; DJ. OiilMria, ead ! Distis pacaner- Is tTtrntm aid CkiUrtm by Landon C. Rives. M. D. .', C4lry aad A(c.( Jurttpniim, by Jaaxa B. Rogers, Maims Jstriite aad Msmsry, by John P. Harrleoa, M. D. 7'Ssery aad Practice a Aridicias, by Daniel Utoke,bk D. DltiMtim aad Practical wfaal.aiy, by-Carey A. Ttlmhle, , Clink! aalrseflen In Ui Cincinnati HoeaUalr by Dotlors Drakn, Parker and Rives. Dr. Trimble will open lbs rooms for Pracliesl Anatomy on ths 1st of October; snd Professor McDowell will commence, at the name lime, n prellminery course of lecture on Ooteology. Kxrsasss. Tickets of lha Profeaaora, SIS each. Metrical-linn fee, a J. Library ticket, (which nuy be taken or omliud i. th option of tbe student) 3. Hoapllal ticket 15, Tlskel u lh Anatainlcal looms 810. (Ths Iwg laur are required, 10 bejaxso., one seailon only.) Tolalt)&5 Reepeclable bnardlag and lodging ean be had for IS per week. Candidate, for graduation are required to Msa (tree years undsr soma reapeclabls pbyilclsn, 10 allend two full course. t lectures, one of wblch muet he In thle school; or to laes featured wu-itiar ear yeacs, and 10 attend one full course la thle school, before they will be sdmltted 10 aa axamlnatlon. In lite prcaeut deranged cuts of tbe currency, lb Pecan daeea . hdiropar toannoonca that they WUI recelvB from etudeau ta pay. men! of Iheir free,, note of reputsble Banks, belonging to lbs Slatenln which they respectively reeide. By order of lha Faculty, August 8.. 7.. 85. LANDON C. RIVES, Dean. Pickaway Common Pleas, Chslles R. By. snd wife. 1 ,,,, RMbaelHolitKS.ei.al. ) IN pursuance of an order of the Court of Common Pleas of said county, made In tlie alwve rate, at ths June term iherof, A. D. 1838,lhll proceed to sell st ths front door ofthe Court houes In lh l.,.rf UJiiJevlrta. nn Of nnrtap . law mj Uvptawlivr nut, between Ihe hours of 10 o'clock A. M. end 4 o'clock r. M. ofaald day, tba following Real Eilste, sttuals In ssld county of Pickaway, to wit: The aoulh half of section niieiber 22, town-' ehlp number 3, range number 22, (M, SJ oonulnlng 317 acres. Also, Its) srrss port of section number 34, and fractional eeetam number 33, township 3, ranie 22, (M. B.) Alan, tbe south-waal quarter of aectlon number 2J, townehlp number 3, range number 22, (M. B ) containing 1 BO acres. Alio, the undivided half of lot number 24, In thejown of South BloomAeldjn ssld cemnty. Pari, of Hi 317 acre liect.and of the Itdl acre tract, t wit: 129a aeree having been eel apart at the down of Raehaet Holmss, widow, of Jonsthsn Hohnee, deeeaaed, by me Irs and bauade, se follows, to wit.- beginning at a Hake northeast comer to tne aoulh-wt quarter of eeetlon number 23, township numhsr 3, range number 22, (M. B-) thsnes wkb s tin of to sam,andstao ofsecllon number 22, north BS degrees, west 354 polee to s stab In tha Cotumbua and Clrclevllle road, thence with said road soutb 4 degrees, west 2 polee 10 s slske, thence north 89 degree, west 22 poles to a stske in tbe terra bank of th Ohio Csnal, thsnes with ths ssma, south I degree, west BOg polee to a Blake, thanes south 89 degieee, Bail 36 polee 10 a slake, thence, north 1 degree, Met 8 poles 10 a sUke In Hut west and of a lane, thence south 89 degree, east 340 poles to s Btaka, from which thorn tree 1 Inches dlsmsler beers north 2 degre, west M Inks distant la the eeat llns of estd qusrtsr section, thenee with said Una nortb 1 degree, eaet 5-tt polee to ths betlnnlng. The whole of said 31T act trad, and tha 160 acre tract will be sold subject to Bald dost, sr.aststs. Terme ofssls. ens third of tba purchase mousy tm nsnd, ons third In on ysar and ths reetdue kt two years with ka una'. M. H. ALKIES, BkWF.C. Allium 8,111.. T..4w.

OHIO STATE JOURNAL AND REGISTER. i VOLUME 28. COLUMBUS, OHIO, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1838. NUMBER 9. I Terms: $3 00 a va in advance other is 454 00. PUBLISHED WCIKLV BV C. SCOTT fc J. M. GALLAGHER. Office on Stale street, Two doore Weit of the Clinton Bank. JOHN M. GALLAGHER, EDITOR. ADVERTISING. Twelve line or letw, onctnioriloii, 90 50 u tliree..." t 00 m i enchaddlttoiiRllnMrtion,,. 3 25 ti . three montln, 3 00 i tlx montlii 5 00 u it tt twelve month!, 8 00 Longer nd vert Isementi hi tlie moii proportion is the above. A deduction of iwnnly par cent., (on the icch,) when the amount exceed! twnfity dollnraiu tlx monthi. AH Advertisement! ehonld be marked on their free with the number of tnwrtio.it denlred, or they will be continued till order d out, and cli urged by the Insertion. No retponiHiillty for errori In legnl Court Advertiwuiente, lieyond the amount charged for their limnlon. tiarly aovkhtiiino. One-eli(IUh of a column, (nhont 25 Hum,) 912 00 One-fourth 16 00 One half. " ......25 00 A full column, 40 00 Any Advertlnr exreedlutr the amount engaged, to he char6d for the esceai, at the ttm rate above mentioned. p" All letters relating to itibfcrintfoni inuat be addreued, (port-paid,) to the ruBuanitR. "EAST AND WEST." When the readers of the National Intelligencer peruse the interesting and able article upon the subject of the North American Review, let them apply its reasonings ami statements to tlie Western Magazine which has recently sprung Pallas-clad into the lending rank of Western periodical literature. For it cannot be gainsaid, that the literature of the Mississippi valley is regarded east of the Apalachian ridge, as American literature is regarded in England. Eastern book-publishers are the dragons which guard the Hesperian avenues, and they look upon adventurers from the West as pilferers who would steal away the golden fruit which in their estimation belongs by copy-right to the authors who have received from them permission to enter the sacred gardens. As the North American Reviow asserted the rights and defended the fame of this great Western empire, so will our more humble monthly demand at the hands of the East, fair re spect and impartial justice towards tlie authors of the Great Mississippi Valley. OHIO. The New York Sunday Morning News has a comprehensive article, the character of which is explained by its title "Political and Historical glance at the States." The portion devoted to Ohio we append. It is in the strain apostrophical. Ohio. Oldest empire State of the emigrating mas- ses that the eastern hives of Anglo-Saxon population have sent fori h. Foremost with the Kentuckiane of Virginia, these New England adventurers spread the dominion of the emigrant and pioneers into the thickets of impenetrable masses of unhewn forest in the midst of massacres, burnings and seal pings by Indian tribes, too horrid for tlie imagination to conceive. Triumphed did they at last; and beauteous fields, a pleasant, wide domain, margined by the blue Lakes and irrigated by nohle rivers, is the reward of their countless perils. The "Buckeye" can sit under his native forest tree, and point with lofty emotions to that which has been and is the deeds of his forefathers that made the fierce savage tremblethe rude huts that served for fortresses and tho wild chaos of vegetation, and tumbling stream, and glassy lake, that in the dreary solitudes covered the land where now lovely villas, and spires, and cities, and canals, and jb aqueducts, and embankments, and culverts, and fleets I of magnificent steamboats booming over the Ohio's wave, give evidence of the mighty changes wrought by men that can and will do "what man dare do." State of the venerated warrior, who stood before the forlorn hope and led on thy legions Slate, that cherishes in thy bosom the brave, llie upright, the spotless hero of Tippecanoe and of the Thames foster thypa--fjjrjjutioneer, and cling round his fortunes, for they are entwined with yours. THOMAS EWING. , Tho Augusta (Maine) Age, having, by way of reproach, styled Mr. Bond " a $eeond fitting, the Kennebcck Journal, published in the same city, refers to the remark in tlie language contained in the paragraph quoted below. It is flattering to Ohio, to know that one of her favorite sons is so properly ap preciated and so highly valued in tlie State lying at the greatest distance from her. The Journal says: We thank the age for the very first words it begins with, "a second Kwine." The allusion is to Thomas Kwing, as fine fellow as ever broke bread, and a Iirst-rale man. lie ocgau nis career oycnoppiiigcura wood fur the suit works, got a few books and read them of eveninirs. or read them at night while he tend ed the salt kettles. The more ho read, the more he wanted to learn. Aftor a few years he made money enough with his axo to pay for some schooling, studied law aftor he was 25, became an eminent lawyer, and was chosen a Senator in Congress from Ohio. When that State went over to Gen. Jackson, Ewing did not go. Me was able to hew his own way in the wooda. or in the councils of the country. Ho was not amoni' tlie flood-wood which went with the tide. He wns mnile of too stubborn stuff. He was Whig in grain, and was found, accordingly, ready to resist the encroachments, and to expose uie corruptions, 01 pow-er. What the Ace particularly alludes to was his f. mous report on Pott Office alnucs, a report which drew upon him the bitterest curses of the mercenary horde who had been fattening on the public plunder. They set uuon him with one accord, from Geortria to Maine. The report was made after great Inbor and indefatigable research, and will go hereafter to show Mr. Kw ing to have been not only a tailhlul, but a most lntie- futiirablo and honest public sentinel. So overwhelm inir were the abuses ferreted out by Mr. L'winnand his associates on the committee, that the President gave Mr. Barry, (tho Postmaster General,) leave to resign, and sent him to Spain, and the man who had the nrinciiial control in the office, Obadiah B. Brown, was dismissed from the office. Brown was a chief clerk, and since tlie dismission Of those vigilant and faithful officers, the two Bradleye, he had grunted ex tra allowances, and made contracts, pretty much as he pleased. He went into office poor, and came out of it worth, it is said, $100,000. It was proved that mail contractors made presents to him, and he granted them extra allowances. Ho wns removed, and made a scapeooat not only for his own sins, but for those of .. ' . . i ...!.l. I..... Was l. I.SnJ otners. Ana wnai wasuoite wiiiiiiiiiu iTnaiiouini and imprisoned for years, as Tobias Walkins wns for a domination ot alow nuuureu aoiuirsi yu mi, no had pocketed forty times as much as Walkins, and did it without any plea of extreme want, as Walkina did. Did tlie vioilant Jackson reformers attempt to punish himl Did the presses which had been so indignant against Walkins utter a word against Brownl Neither. Thus, nrcsaea reserved all Iheir abuse to be showered on the faithful Senator who had probed the iniquity and oxpoaed it to the publics and Parson Brown instead of heiucr nut in the same jail where Walkins had been, is employed to wrilo the "Martyrdom of Villry," in order to make John r airfield available as a cand idate for a Governor of Maine. So much for "another Ewing." If Mr. Bond is another Ewing, it is enough for him. He cannot desire a higher honor, J7" The npslart editors of the Locofoco press are much annoyed at the movements of Young Whigs. One says that no Whig Young Man is good for any thing! and another recommends that the Young Whigs hold their Convention in the Ohio Penitentiary ! MOVEMENTS OF THE PEOPLE.- RICIILAND COUNTY. At a meeting of the Whigs of Springfield township, Richland connty, Ohio, held in Ontario on Saturday the 4th inst., they adopted by unanimous vote, the following preamble and resolutions. Whereas, the measures of the present administra tion have been calculated to disappoint the high expectations excited in the community by previous promises; and whereas, the Executive, by an unwarranted and illegal interference with the currency of the country, has affected such a complete derange ment of money matters, as to paralize enterprise, and affect every part of community; and whereas, we as a party do, and always have disapproved of the caucus system, by means of which the party now in power obtained that power, which they have so basely abused and wielded to the destruction of our dearest interests. Therefore, Haolved, That we consider the exigencies of the limes, and corruption and misrule that obtain, as suf ficient reasons for adopting, at this time., tho caucus system. Itetolved, I hat the members of this convention view with painful regret and decided disapprobation, the course pursued by the present administration; first, in departing in toto from the wholesome principles by which it pledged itself to be governed, if put in power, and pursuing a course derogatory to the best inter ests of tlie people; second, in extravagantly expend ing the people's money on political favorites, and thereby rendering the Treasury bankrupt; third, in an unwarranted and unprecedented exercise and abuse of executive patronage; removiug political opponents and faithful publio servants from office, and thus providing places and rewards for political favorites and hireling followers. Resolved, That we will use every fair and honora ble means to put down a set of office-holders, who have violated the pledges upon which they were promoted, and have wantonly trampled upon the rights of the people and squandered their money. lietolvei. That we will cordially unite in supporting, at the ensuing election, the candidates taken up by Ihe Whigs; so far as the great principles of reform are involved. On motion, Raohed, That a committee of three be appointed to represent Springfield township, in a County Convention lo meet in Mansfield on the 11th inst. The following gentlemen were chosen: Henry Crabs, W. F. Ayes, and A. B. Coffinberry. un motion, Rooked, That the proceedings of this Convention be signed by the Chairman and countersigned by the secretary, ana sent to tne editors ol the "f lag ot the reopie ai voiumDus, lor publication. WM. POOL, CAairnwn. J. C. Evans, Secretary. RESOLUTIONS Adopted at a Convention of the Whig! of Montgomery eoumy. Resolved, That the present irresponsible and irre deemable Government shin plaster party like the unnatural father, who for bread, gave his children a atone, they promised us gold and silver have given us rags otherwise called Treasury Shin Plasters. The people are every where proclaiming in a voice of uiunuri, uejxirt yc wumeni Ul iniquity. ncsoivea, i Mat we regard with the highest granulation, the atronir ana unaualifiod conriemnatinn. which the peopla have, at the ballot box. meted out to the Sub-Treasury Expedient of the present adminis-tion.Residved, That we look earnestly forward to the re turn of the day of a sound currency, and believe, that although the present National Administration may be the last to make its own currency sound, by promptly redeeming its millions of Treasury Notes, it will also be the last, that will venture to tamper with the vital interests of a nation, by attempting to clutch all the i i oj ;i. i ,u. .... L. .?. J ... gu.u a.u on. ci ,o wwihj nt uiu siiectm aim particular benefit of its dependent office-holders. Itetolved, That the election of THOMAS EWING to the United States Senate) by the next Legislature of Ohio, is most ardently desired by the Whigs of Montgomery county, in common with their brethren throughout 'the Stain, and that the honor of siding to reinstate this pure Patriot and Statesman in the high station, to which the voice of the people of his Stale has more than once been raised to demand his recal, will be felt by every Whig of Ohio to be "glory enough fur one day." SHELBY COUNTY. An unusually larira and respectable meeting of the Whigs of this county, was held at the Court-house on Saturday the 38th ull., for the purpose of selecting Delegates to the Senatorial and Representative Convention at Kalida, on the 9th of August, and for making arrangements generally for the approaching b lection. Great harmony and good feeling prevailed through out the meeting. Every man seemed resolved to do his duty in tlie coming contest. J. Hollister of Wood county, was unanimously recommended to the Convention as a candidate for Senator, and Joseph S. Up-degraft of Shelby county, was unanimously recommended to the Convention as a candidate for the House of Representatives. A perfect willingness. however, wns felt and evinced by tho meeting to abide the result of tho Convention, throwing away all per tonal preferences, to unite unanimously and tealously .- i .1 - l -C .i . , . . . r id insure inrj inuiiiiii ui intj grout nnu patriotic principles which actuate them. Mr. Goode is the unanimous choice of the Whigs of the county, as a candidate for re-election to Congress, and he will be supported with increased leal and spirit. RESOLUTIONS Adopted at a Convention of the Whigs of JIW county. Resohed. That the importance of harms- a Whiff Legislature at the next session is greatly enhanced by Ihe fact that a Senator of the United States will be elected for the term of six years. Itetolved, I hat we hereby pledge to our big brethren of this Senatorial and Representative district, our cordial co-operation to redeem Ihe character of the district from the degrading thraldom, to which, through the supineness of some of our political friends we were last year subjected. Resolved, I hat In order to insure success at the polls, and have due and proper influence in the legislative halls, none other but men of well known moral, and political integrity, and talents, ought to be put in nomination. Resolved, That we have undiminished confidence in the wisdom and integrity of Ihe Executive of this Stale, (Joseph Vance,) and pledge ourselves lo use all honorable means to secure his re-election. Remitted, That we pledge ourselves lo aid the Pres ident by all lawful means to follow in the footsteps of his predecessor lo the peaceltil shsdea ol private tile. Resolved, That we hail with unbounded exultation, the evidence, which, from time lo time, for the past year, we have witnessed, throughout the Union, of a radical change in the views of a groat portion of the people heretofore considered as friends of Ihe administration; but morn particularly in the States of Mains, Rhode lalnnd, Connecticut, New York, North Carolina, Mississippi, Virginia, and Louisana; and that the good work is sweeping over the land with an impetus which no art can avert: and wo indulge tho Joyous hope that the present year will yet witness the addition of Illinois, Michigan and New Hampshire. Resolved, That as our only hope of achange of mea sures in the government, favorable lo Ihe interests of the people, rests upon a chango oi men, and as this can only bo etiocieu tnrougn tne oauoi oox, we earnestly solicit the whigs of this county, lobe up and doing. Resolved, That the Central Committee of this coun ty, be requested, forthwith, to adopt such measures as shall effect a complete organiiation of the whigs in every township, that our whole strength may be felt at uie pons, on tne socona i ueeony oi uciooer next! From the Cincinnati Gazette. CANVASS FOR GOVERNOR. No. 1. Peculiar traits of character mark the present canvass for Governor iu Ohio, as it is conducted on Ihe part of those, who support the measures of the execu tive department of the Nation one of the most stri king is, the open boldness with which the candidate comes out and rests his claim lo preference upon the ground of adherence to the measures of the national executive. Avowedly, he is ihe Van Buren locofoco cand idate. The power and patronage of tlie President of the U. States are directly brought to bear upon the Stale election of Governor. For the operative benefit of this power, in all its appliances, the candidate submits himself to the drudgery of performing service, heretofore unknown in the election of a Governor of Ohio. He is selected for his ready utterance, and it is imposed upon him that he shall traverse the State, and speechify in defence of his patron President. A well broke ox comes to his place, at the sight of his yoke, and on the word of his driver; even so Wilson Shannon takes up his burthen. He is bidden and he obeys. A servitude like this in an election canvass for Governor of Ohio, is a new thing under the sun. Should it be greeted with a favorable reception, or should it be frowned upon, as a measure of evil tendency that ought to be reprobated and repelled, on Ihe instant of its appearancel Every good citizen should faithfully commune with himself upon the matters which these inquiries bring into view. If he can find any commendable point in this scheme of conducting a gubernatorial election, he must look at publio affairs, in a light very different from that present to my vision. It seems to me every way discreditable, that a candidate for the Chief Magistracy of one of the separate States of the Union, should engage himself to become the white-washing partizan of the President in office, and, in virtue of that engagement, should cast himself from place to place, wiih his ready manufactured soap-suds and white-wash, and with assorted brushes, prepared to work at any job the Kitchen Cabinet scullions may assign him. In this vocation Wilson Shannon has recently been employed, and his employers have had the benefit of such swath and frolh as he could manufacture. With these he was directed to bespatter ihe banks. The product of his labors has been embodied and printed for public edification. It is worth while to look a little at Us contents. A little more than twelve months ago, the Globe issued a denunciation against banks, in behalf of President Van Buren, and in the form of a letter from General ex-President Jackson. This was Ihe Ox Driver holding up the yoke and giving the word. The entire team, far and near, walked into its place, by individuals, and in Ihe aggregate. Destruction a-gainst banks was instantly recognized as the locofoco watchword, throughout tlie Union. It was upreared as an alarum tocsin of party, and changes of every character of denunciation have been rung upon it from that time to this, when all are embodied In Ihe tremendous alarum of Wilson Shannon. Here is one of its intonations. "A deadly enemy has obtruded itself upon onr fancied security, and is penetrating with its subtlest strength the vitals of our political independence. Less obvious in its operations than a foreign enemy, it is far more dangerous; and should be met with as determined resistance. Il is the money power of the country in tlie hands of defectively organized corpora-Will any reader lend his attention to an analizalion of this singular paragrapbl It may be worth his while. "A deadly enemy the money power of the country in the hands of defectively organized corporations" is in our midst. Is this a truth subject to no controversy t If it be a truth, Ihen note the consequences it includes. It fastens upon the people, the citizens of the State, two most revolting stigmas: Gross ignorance and sordid corruption- one so destitute of discrimination as to cherish 'a aeadly enemy and regard It as a Iriend- iy agent tne oilier, so unse in .pint, aa to uuw op- ore the money power, In the most abject prostration of idolatrous adoration 1 Are the people of Ohio thus ignorant! do they sacrifice to the Moloch of money their whole moral sense! II this is not the condition of Ihe great body of the citizens, Ihen Wilson Shannon founds his denunciation of the banks upon a radi cal misconception of facts. I hold that Wilson Shan non is thus mistaken: that tlie people of Ohio are a discerning people, spt in rvimpr..hndinrj what is inju-1 rlous, andwhal ad vintagnous lo thtir interests pri.,ri J in tne puroim ui inuMi luitiresi., out witn a lieou y regard to legal and moral obligation. The banks are in no sense, "a deadly enemy:" the aggregate of their operations have not inflicted injuries, but have confer red oenehta upon the country. The location ot a bank always has been hailed as a beneficial measure, in every community where auch location has been made and this has not turned out to be mere matter of moonshine the reality has entered into all Ihe business of the place. Banks hsre origi nated snd fostered enterprise. Hence bos come an increased value of land, an improved market for all the productions of agriculture, higher wages to the laborers. Banks have built up towns, constructed steamboats, given life and vigor to mechanics, founded com mercial houses, developed new sources ol commerce. tanks have constructed canals and raii-roada and turnpikes Banks have built churches and school houses. In everything upon which we pride ourselves foi use, for convenience, for instruction, for embellish ment, Banks have largely contributed, by agencies direct and indirect, often imperceptible aa the atmosphere, seen and felt only in nappy and pemauent ie-suits. No man ean deny to Banks the beneficial agen cies here attributed to them. What counteracting deadly mlschiel accompanies those operations so lo overbalance them, as that Banks should be marked for reprobation! Wilson Shsnnon says they have become politioal engines. We will look at thai in another number. From IlieClnrlnmU OsietM. CANVASS FOR GOVERNOR. No. 9. "I think it is susceptible of Uie clearest demonstra tion that the banking institutions have become thoroughly and distinctly political, and have boldly taken the field, and formed a strict alliance with a powerful, active, and organized party, in open hostility to our most valuable institutions. Thus speaks Wilson Shannon, and he dovolea bim self to Ihe demonstration that he speaks correctly This calls for examination. He commences with the dead Monster: "The various movements of the late Bank of the U, States are notorious. Prom Ihe moment General Jackson expressed a determination to oppose its further existence, that institution has been exercising nil Its stupendous powers to thwart and overthrow an administration, invosled with its only authority, by the people. The Bank of the United Slates was a public insti tution, in which a vory great number of citiiens, of all classes, took a deep interest, I hey believed It to be constitutionally organized: to be of vital impor tance, oi inoispensunie necpssity to tne neaitniui operations of the business of the country: they apprehend great derangements, perplexities and losses to individuals, and vexatious embarrassments to the pub lio, from its discontinuance. Thai a large mass of American citizens thus estimated the Bank of tlie U. States is indisputable. 1 heso citizens had an undouht ed right to struggle for the oontinunnce of an institution that ihey valued aa of so much usefulness. When lien. Jackson, as president ol the U. smtea, avowed HIS "determination to oppose its future existence." did thai avowal deprive any cititen of HIS right to advocate that existence! Did the hostile avowal of the Pre sident take from the institution any right whatever! Was it not one of the rights of Ihe Individuals who composed and conducted the institution lo ask of Congress a continuance of iu existence! Is it not, then, a strange perversion of right reason to treat Ihe efforts of Ihe Bank and its fri nils to sustain it, against the determination of President Jackson that it should he destroyed, as a wrong offered lo any body! What is this, but making il out a crime to attempt thwarting the determination of the President, upon any impor- tant puDiio iHHuuf , n uuuiniio use uii. i. in in. oigw est degree, anti-Republican. It invests the President with tlie moBt absolute power, even to the taking away from every citizen his right of free discussion. Here is the plain interpretation: "the President has declared his deteimination: the President is invested with his only authority by the people: therefore, to oppose the declared determination of tlie President, is a bold and unscrupulous obliquity not to be tolerated!! " This mischievous super-monarchical notion is a leading feature, in all the dogmas of our new locofoco democracy. The determination of the President controls all the departments of Ihe Government, legislative and judicial, as well as executive, and in addition shuts up the mouth of the citizen ! ! Wilson Shannon promulges this doctrine, in holding up to reproacli the conduct of the Bank ol the U. States, in struggle-ing to retain its existence notwithstanding the proclaimed determination of President Jackson. I hold that the struggle of the Bank was legitimate. The imputations of corruption against it, in my judgment, are unsupported by proof. The warfare between the President snd the Bank, and between the citizens who took different sides, was a contest naturally arising out of the character and progress of onr government. That it assumed, on the part of President Jackson, a personal character towards the Bank, is a consequence of Ihe same monarchical heresy just noticed. The President and his adherents treated the efforts of tlie Bank as acts of rebellion. The locofoco democracy have adopted this notion, and they continue to rage a-gainst Nick Biddle in a spirit of maniac impotence, humiliating to Uie. spirit of the country. The heresies of Wilsoi Shannon are but the misconceptions snd exsggersibns of Ihose who have made battle a-gainst the Bank of the U. S., and who continue their warfare against the Biddle Bank of Pennsylvania, with which the State of Ohio has certainly very little to do. The Slate Banks cams iu for a full share of Wilson Shannon's reprehension: "Our Stale Banks are little less tinctured with the same exceptionable spirit. FacM of daily occurrence will evidence the truth of this remark. In the answers of the Ohio Banks to the interrogatories propounded by the Auditor of State, last winter, by far the greater portion of these institutions, assigned aa the cause of their suspension, the policy of Uie government, thus evincing their readiness to cast anon the administration the responsibility of a mischievous event; which, if it had any adequate cause, was Ihe result of their own defective organization and mismanagement."And here is Wilson Shannon, speaking in the name of locofoco democracy, venting indignation against the State Banks, because they declare their own belief, that the measures of the National Administration have mainly contributed to the suspension of Specie Eayments ! The National Administration must not e touched ! To impute to any of its measures mischievous results, !8l'indulgean"cxc9i(inaernVi7," tlie same, seditious and rebellious as that evinced by Ihe Bank of the U. Statos! What is there of just exception to the spirit, or to Ihe fact of a reference, by the Ohio Banks to Ihe bearing of the measures of the Administration upon their affairs! This reference may be erroneous, and for that reason exceptionable; but in the fact of making it there could be no impropriety: none surely in the circumstances under which Ihe reference was made. The National Administration, when President Jackson proclaimed his determinalion to put down Ihe Bank of the U. Slates, courted sn alliance with the State Banks and invited them directly both to politi cal and pecuniary association. And the State Banks much 10 iheir discredit, greedily accepted the Invitation. A number of them associated themselves in money engagements with the Administration, and the political relation very soon became manifest. The money power favor enjoyed by the Government sffi-lialed Banks, was felt by sll the banking institutions. It insinuated itself into all their business with the "subtlest stealth," and unavoidably subjected them to the operations of the National Treasury. Their political relationship was not of their own seeking in its origin; many of them never entered into it, and paid tho penalty in obstructions of their business. The failure ol this association of the National Treasury and of tlie affiliated Banks was a necessary consequence of its absurdity, aided somewhat by knavery in its management. Intelligence forsaw and foretold the catastrophe; but the certainty of its approach could not move the Administration to take any measures tending lo prevent it. The crisis oame, and immediately the National Administration determined to heap ell the odium nnn, if. Aosdiittnni. the Ranks. The money connexion was dissolved, Ihe political association severed in twain. The National Administra tion set its mark upon the Banks, and Ihe word went forth that the locofoco democracy should do Iheir utmost to place them like Cain of old, in the predica ment ol being slain by every one. I he locoloco democracy opened upon the Banks, and the Banks hsve turned lo defend themselves. The attempt at auch defence is pronounced by Wilson Shannon aa evin cing a most "exceptionable spirit," lor which Ihe Uanks should be punished by such reform as tlie lo cofoco democracy may dictate! r rom Ihe sketch here given, the man who looks straight forward with his own eyes must see, that the political attitude of the State Banks is not a position of their own seeking. President Jackson seduced them into the political focus by formingsn alliance between them and the National Treasury When they could no longer be made of sny use, in that alliance, ihey were devoted to a ditlnrent destiny. 1 hey have had all Ihe sine of the broken up copartnership heap ed upon their backs, and tlie locofoco democracy have uvu snovting .nu continue to snout at litem, in tne manner of scape-goats of the olden lime to tlie wilderness. Driven from the political association intow hich they were first seduced snd marked by il for destruction, the Hanks arrange themselves with politicsl party for their own preservation. The Whigs know the value of Banks, and wish their preservation. They fully understand the destructive character of locofoco democracy reform, and thus feel the necessity of conservstiva association to defeat it. It has been defeated again and again, and is doomed to final defeat. The disparaging assumption of Ihe locofoco democracy, that Ihe people have not been influenced by deliberate Judgment, but have been swayed by a mere bank panic, will be indignantly repelled. Wilson Shannon snd thousands more of the locofoco democracy will learn lo iheir cost, that Ihe people have no relish for Iheir doctrines no favorable estimate of its advocates. J7Wilson Shsnnon in speech, says that the Banks hsve become political." Who made them so, Mr. Shannon! Read the following, remembering that the writer was a Vanjackson member of the Legislature when ke wrote il, and has since received a Federal sppointsient from Mr. Van Buren: "Albanv, 6lh January, 1833. "Dkas Juoob Yours just received. There are mora applications for Banks this year than ever before. ou must make out a complete list of Directors, Officers, &e. and if obtained yu must know Am. It MUST be a JACKSON BANK, and the BANK JUNTO in this place must be allowed to have a finger in the pie. Yours truly, PH. MAXWELL. " Z. Allen, Judge, to." FRANKLIN NOMINATIONS ABROAD. Tlie Clevelmul Herald thus speaks of the Whig ticket of this county: The Whigs of Franklin county have led the field in an early organiiation. They held their county convention on Uie 4ih, and put up "good men and true" for the Assembly. The nominations are Col. Juhn Kilbonrn, of Worlhington, and John W. Andrews, Esq. of Columbus. Col. Kilbourn is an old pioneer of the State, wilt unites the experience and talents that will do honor to her legislative councils. Mr. Andrews is a young genlleman of the first order of lalenls, an eloquent advocate, and a ready and skilful debater of winning address. Boiler selections eould not havo been made, 17" Tin Steamer Clinton was sunk recently a few miles below the mouth of Ihe Ohio. OHIO STATE AGIUCULTURAL SOCIETY, AMEETINO or Uie Directors of 111. Olik) Butt. Airteuliurel Society, Km held In Circlevllla, on July 28lll. pureuanl to adjournment Hreient, Win, Millar, Win. Renlek, Sr., EluU rrait, jomi wnllte, tvm. Uenlck, Jr., and Felll Renlek. An article wne n lJed and appended to tlie by lawe of the So eiety, numliered liy-law 12th. Tlie followlni tut of Premiums was then srianged by the Directors.ror Hie beat sued hull, silver plot, worth fSO 00 eecond beet do do do 40.00 Ihlrd ben do do do 30.00 for Ihe beet hull, S years old do 40i00' second beet do do do 30:00 third heat do do do 2S.IJ0" For the bell 1 year old boll do SO'.OO' second best do do do 3A.M Ihlrd brat do do do M'OO Deat bull calf under 1 year do 25.00 second beat do do do 20 00 third beet do do do 16 00- Covb, Helfero. and Heller eatvea, are onlltfedm Ihe same pra- mluinsln proportion to ages. For lha best 3 year old atoer or over tfl 00 do 3 do do do IO.DO do 1 do do do 10.00-After appointing Judies to award the premsime the meeting adjourned. WM. MlkLAH, P P. TV P. K. Unci., aee'r. O.S. A B. August 17. .9 4w. NOTICE TO ARCHITECT. TIIR Orend Lodge ofOhlo, having reaoived to ereer a Masonic Hall In Ihe town of Lancaster, the umhrtiigaed eom-mitlee, are authorised lo olTer a premium of one )iundrodBnd fifty dollars for the buit archlieciural plan, and enventy'flve dohars for the second lit plan, which must be accompaailed'irlth eslllnatea, and all suitable Information-. The plana are rei'iitred to be forwarded-' to-Laaeaster, Ohio, addrefsed lo William J. Ueeee.on or before-Uie-thvd Molidny In October next. Primed eperlflcatinne of Ihe size of .h liuildlnff. its location, dimenalone of the rooms, materials to betnaori, Ate. can lie obtained by epplleatlon lo William J. Reear4 Aaucarrier. Williaai IL Thrall, at L'lrcleville, Samuel Hlokcty. at Sleubenvllle, J. .'. Copeleii,at Cincinnati, or to Ro!rt Stewart, at aniiMvillo, Sllilo. WILLIAM I. KKIIHK, WILLIAM U. TflNALLY I 8AMUKL dTOKELBYV Ctmiun, J. O. GOPKMSN, . UOI1KI1T BTEWAETV August 17.. 9 2m. rjTRdltors In this State, friendly to the- inrArtotktn, will confer s fHvor by giving iho above a few tnaertlona m their respective papers. Q 7 Upcclflcalloni can alio lie had atiUiktamce.". ' Anli-Hpaaniodic Tincture, or MinMr'sVomforU fTMIIB moillcine haa been prepared with special reference to Uis L wents of fnmille, In order that Mother's wlslit keep snd uea It with moet perfect safety. It ta used wila unequalled success in Dlnrrliosa In all Its various forms, Dyaoalevy, Cramp Colic, snd summer dhieases of children. For sale by-oppoitiaent by Aitguat..T..6r. r-H-H. B. IIDTI.EB. Nl'RINO NTF.F.L. Q TON Spring Steel 1 j X t and 2 In. X as. a. very superior ar-bv ticls, Just received end for ssle by the mlneriliers. KLI.IS.-WINdLOW CO." July 30, 18.M..8..3SW. American, English nud Gentirut Locks. JUST received a further supply of Amcvtean.Jsnglhili and German tacks, assorted si-tee , for sn'e lowliy July 17, 1038. .6 ELI.I8, Wirt BLOW fc Co. SCREW PLATES. - 1D07.. very superior Screw Plates Just r cee tared from tdia atslf ufsclurea and for sale at a entail advance upon coat.-July 27, I8J8..6 ELL18, WtflBLOW t Ce. Tacks, Brads, and Sparables. . Sll 1 DOXES Jost received, comprising all shies for sal un- usually low by ELLIS, WIN-SLOW. Co. Juty27,18'l8..6..3iw. RACH. ISAAC K. WHITING eonllnuee to pay Uva-kfgheM price for Rags, In llookt, Paper, Stationary, or any Mner artkkahe lite In bli Store. April II. CUTI.ERV. JUST received, 1 Cask of Cutlcry,eotisbitlfior.uhlsBnd dssert knives end forks. Ivory balance hand la do. pen, pocket, 2 and 3 blade knlvee, ecUaors, shears, fte., making a Beautiful assort-msul, for sale aa usual, very low. by July 27, 18.18. .6 ELLIS, WrHSLOW ct Co. RIFLE BARRELS. JUST received a lot of Ride liarrele of superior rpisUty, snd will shortly be In receipt of a furlhev4uv-ply, for sals unsonf omnlylowby ELLIS,-WIN8LOW Jr. Ce. July 27, 1838. .8 SWEET OIL IV HETTIES. 3WEET Oil In Bottles, for Table IJicm J JustOTeelvsd by July St. T1IOS. B.-lltJTI.F.R. PEl-UMERYt'. CUT Glial Smelling Balta. Rowland'a Genuine Macosssr OIL . Anllqus Oil. Beers Oil. Cream of Lllllee. Prentiee' Comp. Shaving Cakes, Nov.-! A 1'. ou BwM, ajt . A.lviny July 24. Taroej, BuBirn.eR.I BRUSHES.. LONG Handle Flerit Broebes. Assorted Hair Urushee. Tooth do. Null do. Just received-ftnd for sale by July 21. TlfOSi -8. -BIJTI.KR. LINSEED OIL. S1 PTS. Turpentine. Lamp oil. Olive OIL Whits Lead In Kega, Oround. x " Dry. Jutl received by July 24. TIIIM.-8. BUTLER. 11 . 1-u A SUPERIOR article, at wholesale, by N. BALDWIN, Anrll IJ Ma A V....I.II. D-lut- 1. j 1 Sift BARRELS Flour for oale bv O. W. SHERWOOD... July 27 At llis brick Wnre houealieaitof ths Canal. MITIf'ST. IS hereby given to all persons Inlsreoted, tlml st our Inatsncs a writ of sttachment wae tlile day heard by Ateaander Cameron, a Justice of Hut Peers of Madlaon.townshrp, In the eoaaly of Franklin, asalust Ilia goode, ehatlele, rights, crIUs, monsys snd effecte of Henry llavely, an absconding dstitor. August B..7..3W KOOKRN ft RAREY. First Premium rrnwi enmum. THIS year Ilia Juilly celebrated Kettferd Crown Glass bus taken the Gold Medal, at lha American Institute; belag Ihe lira jear aucceseion, trial tne anuria, has beeoaweidod toil. It will be ased In Ilia new Eichange, Cueeeas Hauss, Asylum for the Blind, In the elty of New Yoak, and. In all Ilia new buildings now erecting by tlie Corporation, of dial city; also, In the 01-rard College, Philadelphia, and tlie oahlle bulldlnse at Waihlng-UM. Many very prominent aubln) ediicea dwalllne houiee. etores snd eteasa boats, eould aa named, where tt hi lo be used, (ana a large number or each where It. has been used, and given entire Benefaction.) But H le believed Hal the above will .ullire to prove tlml thle glues atands pro einlaenulhat II deeervedly tasoe precedence of every other aerl In market, and that It la In great request throughout the United Slates. Ilrilere for eny elans from 8 s 4 to 30 I 2MBlveeeeudqua. Ity, for dwellings, etoree, eteem huala, greaa hoasea, sky lights, Ac, promptly aiecuted, at the tnanufacluret'aprlcea.by ths subscribers, regularly appointed agenn for the manutieiuram. ELLIS, WINrtLOW k CO.. TIN publle sre rsajasstsd is call and asamwe Sn ankle. Eltrect from lha Rrport of the Commutes at MisAsMtkaB la alllule, Oclobet 1HJ7., " For rlehneea ot Inure and brllbnncy of surface, (aa well aa Ibkkuaea and atrength.) Uie Bedford Glaea la the moet beautiful article of tho kind, that haa ever fallen under aur nnllca. ullher of domeetle or foreign production and II affords a proud rnscl- "" "' ana enterprise ot Amerloaa aianuraclurers." The underelgned having used the above described iliu. In a greet number of public and private buildings, ef il Aral elasa, accord fully will, the foregoing eollmatastf. Iu merits, and par. iicuisriy recommend it to ell persona, whosequlre sslrong, dura bis snd brllllsnt article. Wis nt. eLaaiaaa, aarulTBuTB. William Harsell, Robert Mills, Architect, William H. Peek, Publkt Buildings, st Samuel Roome, Washington Rooms At Jarohua, Martin E. Thompson, Warner ts Klented, Issiah Rogers, Seaman dl Moors, Itbtet Towns, Alesander Slewert, Calvin Pollaid, Cornelius Mcl.eon, Gamaliel King, John Fream Jr. Thomas Thomss. Ordsrs for Bent G lass, Ground Glare, Sialsed Ulasa, for Church ae of every patiern and description, promptly executed as abovs. August 6. TOO ACRES OF LAND FOR SALE. rarsilR subscriber will sell 700 scree of unimproved land, (pert M. oi survey no. 71174, lorsiea in ine name ot John crawrord) lying In Union and Madhun countiee, on the Slate road leading from llellefonulne to Columbus, 2 miles snst of I'lenaint Valley, 8 miles from Dublin, on the Sclolo river, 1H mllee from Columbus, and 1 1 from Worlhington. The turnpike road from Bellefon-lalue lo Columbus, will paas through II. Ths Isnd H rich and well timbered, and In consequence of Ha local ellualkin, muet eoma day become very valuable. The whole tract will be sold low inn body, between that end September neat. If not sold thsn, It wl'l bs divided ao bb to auk those who may want-smsll lota, lltlo Inu and Indiaputabie, and terms sasy. JOHN a ELBERT, Juu. Mlddleburg, Logan eo.,0., July 30, Iltl8..6,.dw. P. B. Reference, Mway Curry, Ess,,, Mmena llaaa,andCal. Haye; near lbs premises. HEAD aUARTEltaV 2" Bets. 7tb Oiv. O. K. I J)eylattarf, jsmgutt 14, 1838. J MAJOR Samuel Brush, has been appointed Brlgsde Major, Capt. Wray Thomas, Brigade Quarter Heater, and Cape. Carter B. Harlan, Aid decamp to the Brigadier General, who are" to be obeyed and respected as such. Col. M. Finney, Iste Commsndant of Brigads, has gives the requieite notice, that officer muster will be held In. the city of Columbus on the 30tb fast, at which time the offieere'wui appear armed snd equipt according lo law. and furnish tbemaelvae-wlth lente, Ice., to perform camp duty. All delinquents Will bs rigidly dealt Willi according lo Isw. JAJdiB V. REYNOLDS, August 17. .9 tm. Br(g. Ben. Said Brig. NOTICE. rrtftK e-meers of the Id Reg. 2d Brig. 7th Dlv. O. af. are soliled X1 to mm to bold an orlcer atuater In Columbus, on the SOtfe snd 31rf Inst., snd parade In front oftheSlale bouae at 10 o'clock A. AT prepared to do ramp duty. By order of the Colonel. Adgiwt 1T.-9 tm.' P. TOLLER, AdJL T ATTENTION REGIME OFnCERSV HE Commissioned and Staff OHleera of the let Regiment, 24 Brig. 7th Dlv. O. U. are hereby eommarided'to parade on High atreet In front ofthe Cnpllol at the City of Columbue, on the 30tll snd 31st Inst. st 10 o'clock A. H. of ssld daya, armed and equipped to perform Officer Mualer, and also be prepared to do" camp duty aa la required by law; officers are further requested lo" hsve with them their Commissions. By order of tbe Coinmsndsnl of ssld Regiment. A iicum 3. .10 tm. . V. McELVArN-. RRHiinsi nnnKiilt.' ATTENTION officers of 1st Rltli Baltalion',' The Commla-sloned and Stair vfflcere of the lit Ride Bat. at B. Vth n O. M., are hereby commanded to parade on High atreet, In front of the Capital, at the city of Columbus, on Uie 30th and 31st Inst. st 10 o'clock A. U. of said daya, fully armed and equipped for Of. Acer Mueter;.nd slso to perform camp duty aa required by law. omceraara tures.veqneted.u, lavs wilt them.thtlr commut-etone, that they may be endorsed, i Ily order of Coaunandaut of Battalion -. Auget8.-7- O. ttUNYOtt. Adl'nt. T ATTENTION SQUA IRON 'OFFICE RSI II E Commissioned and Staff Olttcere e the let Squadron of ' ; Cavalry, 2d llrlg., 7th Dlv , O. .. sre hereby commanded l parade on high street, In front oflheCapllol.at tlie city ofCo-IbiiiIhis, on lbs 30ih last, st 10 o'clock A. M. of said dsy, armed and equipped to perform Officer Hueter. And also, be prepared Ul doeaiapdaly, ails required bylaw. Officers sre further required,. t hive wlih them their Commiaiions. By orderrthe Coinmsndsnl of ssld Bquadrenv Augst3L.l.w CARTER B. HARLAN, AJJ'nt. G IIKOMliffre.il Baltimore, No.l. French YH law Hi-lira. Gum Copal, East India Scraped. Estraet Logwood. Just received by Agnet8..7..6w. THO. 8, BOTtVErf. DIHHObUTION. THT! oo partnerahlp,haretofora eilsllng snder the name and ftrmof L. L Ol Humphrey it Co. Is Ibis day dissolved. L. HUMPHREY, D. HUMPHREY, Columbns, Aug.l,1838..6..swBW O. HUMPHREY. orr '''lie basiaess will be continued at the old stand, andei the Arm of L. TJamphrey k Co. HlfiCTrrTnRHi tvn-ris.si' ALL persons Indebted to the eetate of Afalbew Chain, dee'd, late of Meilison township, Frsnklla county, sre requited lo make Immediate navtnent: and all thnoa k., ..... aaid eatate, will present them legally aHttieruleated wUbln ou year irvm oate. n.A'1 tatKOMS CHAIN, J , JrtfUS. nri!HTn!nui I Aofu3.1R3n..7..4w, ' T PUBLIC RALE OF PROPERTY. IE anbeerilier wUI offer for aala I Un -blgheat Udder, the farm en which he at present resides, contamtnt twev boa, drad aeree nearly half cleared. There le oo the place s -goeoV dwcHkig house end ether out-houees, s good orchard, and s 8rat rale well of waler In the yard. There ie a good meadow. Aa. I will alio sell the thorough- bred boras Junius, the same day, wl'b. hie true pedigree; elm, soma other banes and aolta. some ecaal . aailcli eowa and calves snd- other eattla and hoga; also, farming, tools of different kinds, hoesehold and Skeneo fUmHara, A a. The land will be aold In payments. Persona wiahlng to buy land weuWdo well ta come and view the land before tlie day of sal, aa bargain la now offered. Terms for the other property will bs saade hnowuonlhadayof sale. n-Saia lo commence at 1 atcraesy o Saturday its 25tb day r of Auyuat, Tillolmueputable- THOMAS DDRRETTj . Bdota-lownslilp, Plckswsy CO. 0, August 3. 1838..T-3W NOTICE. IN eendbrmlly wHb the Statute of Ohio, In thle coos mads and provided, preorrlbing tba duties of County Treasurers, the Tree merer of Union eeunly gives notice Inst the amount of tax levied In Helen county for the present yesr, hi as follows, vbt i For Stale, Caual, County, Road, School, and other paiiiisae. la Union, Darby, Mlllcreek, Leeiburg, Jaebaca, Allen, ClaybournH. and Waibtngton townships. IS mills an the daSar of valuation: and In Parle, Liberty and Jeekten, 16 mills, and la York tosra. aliip, 20 mllla on the dollar of valuation; and thai the Treesursv will auend, either by himself or deputy, one dav In each town ship, ntulie usual place of holding elections In said lownablp, for iMcpiupuav ui receiving iaxcs,ss ioiiowb: In Union tp. No. , Aug. 21 ' InLeeebarata.ff.r. Ans.M Darby 2, 22 Alien, 8, - 30 Jesaoss-Mine reek Pavta Liberty h 3, -23 Jeekssa 9, Sept. 6 4, 24 I York 10, 4 . n, ii-i utaybMHa- Washington "la. n a and at bli aOea m Marravllle during lbs months of Oatabet snd November, for lbs purpose of recelimg rhe can fee lbs nraaaaa 'August,.., A. POLLOCK, Trass. . FURTHER NOTICE. rTTtl E iralOK eoaaly Superintendent of Common Schools UJ ,k X tend at thesame time and place for the purpose oCenoaUn, wllh. and MfnMiw m..m. ,1.. ... 1 1, ' . - , . ., ' me supennten. denleandlhe Dtrectore ofthe respecUvs towtumlpa... ThJaat Ura . August 8. .7 A. POLLOCK, Traaa. Medical Department of the Cincinnati Collesre. TUB Session eommsness the lait Monday of October, and terminates Uie leal Salardny of February; but by a lata regulation of the faculty, four lectures will be delivered dally by the profeeMrs during ths period of examination of candidal! foe degree, -which will, nrdsr ne circustiuaMS, Cjonswaos until tba regular aeaawn shall have expired. Special aud Sarfteel .laalewy. by Joseph N. McDowell, M. D, Gaatref sod Fat Mtfial aalesiy ad Myriefwy, by Samuel D. Grose, M.D. Stni by Wlllsrd Psrker, II; DJ. OiilMria, ead ! Distis pacaner- Is tTtrntm aid CkiUrtm by Landon C. Rives. M. D. .', C4lry aad A(c.( Jurttpniim, by Jaaxa B. Rogers, Maims Jstriite aad Msmsry, by John P. Harrleoa, M. D. 7'Ssery aad Practice a Aridicias, by Daniel Utoke,bk D. DltiMtim aad Practical wfaal.aiy, by-Carey A. Ttlmhle, , Clink! aalrseflen In Ui Cincinnati HoeaUalr by Dotlors Drakn, Parker and Rives. Dr. Trimble will open lbs rooms for Pracliesl Anatomy on ths 1st of October; snd Professor McDowell will commence, at the name lime, n prellminery course of lecture on Ooteology. Kxrsasss. Tickets of lha Profeaaora, SIS each. Metrical-linn fee, a J. Library ticket, (which nuy be taken or omliud i. th option of tbe student) 3. Hoapllal ticket 15, Tlskel u lh Anatainlcal looms 810. (Ths Iwg laur are required, 10 bejaxso., one seailon only.) Tolalt)&5 Reepeclable bnardlag and lodging ean be had for IS per week. Candidate, for graduation are required to Msa (tree years undsr soma reapeclabls pbyilclsn, 10 allend two full course. t lectures, one of wblch muet he In thle school; or to laes featured wu-itiar ear yeacs, and 10 attend one full course la thle school, before they will be sdmltted 10 aa axamlnatlon. In lite prcaeut deranged cuts of tbe currency, lb Pecan daeea . hdiropar toannoonca that they WUI recelvB from etudeau ta pay. men! of Iheir free,, note of reputsble Banks, belonging to lbs Slatenln which they respectively reeide. By order of lha Faculty, August 8.. 7.. 85. LANDON C. RIVES, Dean. Pickaway Common Pleas, Chslles R. By. snd wife. 1 ,,,, RMbaelHolitKS.ei.al. ) IN pursuance of an order of the Court of Common Pleas of said county, made In tlie alwve rate, at ths June term iherof, A. D. 1838,lhll proceed to sell st ths front door ofthe Court houes In lh l.,.rf UJiiJevlrta. nn Of nnrtap . law mj Uvptawlivr nut, between Ihe hours of 10 o'clock A. M. end 4 o'clock r. M. ofaald day, tba following Real Eilste, sttuals In ssld county of Pickaway, to wit: The aoulh half of section niieiber 22, town-' ehlp number 3, range number 22, (M, SJ oonulnlng 317 acres. Also, Its) srrss port of section number 34, and fractional eeetam number 33, township 3, ranie 22, (M. B.) Alan, tbe south-waal quarter of aectlon number 2J, townehlp number 3, range number 22, (M. B ) containing 1 BO acres. Alio, the undivided half of lot number 24, In thejown of South BloomAeldjn ssld cemnty. Pari, of Hi 317 acre liect.and of the Itdl acre tract, t wit: 129a aeree having been eel apart at the down of Raehaet Holmss, widow, of Jonsthsn Hohnee, deeeaaed, by me Irs and bauade, se follows, to wit.- beginning at a Hake northeast comer to tne aoulh-wt quarter of eeetlon number 23, township numhsr 3, range number 22, (M. B-) thsnes wkb s tin of to sam,andstao ofsecllon number 22, north BS degrees, west 354 polee to s stab In tha Cotumbua and Clrclevllle road, thence with said road soutb 4 degrees, west 2 polee 10 s slske, thence north 89 degree, west 22 poles to a stske in tbe terra bank of th Ohio Csnal, thsnes with ths ssma, south I degree, west BOg polee to a Blake, thanes south 89 degieee, Bail 36 polee 10 a slake, thence, north 1 degree, Met 8 poles 10 a sUke In Hut west and of a lane, thence south 89 degree, east 340 poles to s Btaka, from which thorn tree 1 Inches dlsmsler beers north 2 degre, west M Inks distant la the eeat llns of estd qusrtsr section, thenee with said Una nortb 1 degree, eaet 5-tt polee to ths betlnnlng. The whole of said 31T act trad, and tha 160 acre tract will be sold subject to Bald dost, sr.aststs. Terme ofssls. ens third of tba purchase mousy tm nsnd, ons third In on ysar and ths reetdue kt two years with ka una'. M. H. ALKIES, BkWF.C. Allium 8,111.. T..4w.